Comments

That's horrendous! It's probably some junior had a 'great idea' and no-one else in the in-house office likes NIN so wouldn't have clicked. It's so difficult to do anything about it though - the company I work for has a major copyright problem at the moment and there's pretty much nothing you can do. All you can really do is carry on being fresher and better and leave them behind, looking tired.

I absolutely agree. You can also 'spread the word' around the design industry (and given the source the work - around the music industry too) so people are actually aware of what's happened. If McDonald's don't pay the price financially they will at least be known for plagiarising and thinking its OK.

Whether that will disuade people from buying Big Macs is another conversation though.

Saw this a few months ago. The cut in half logo is the real giveaway. It does happen all the time though - in my workplace for one much to my annoyance. I thought the Sony Bravia / Kozyndan saga was a much worse public ripoff. A few months after Kozyndan are asked to submit work, Passion produce the advert and deny anyone there had ever seen the work? Come on...

I'm not condoning what the guy did, but honestly, Carson has been imitated so much over the past 15 years, I'm not sure this is any different than any other time. I don't think he can do anything about it. (Not to mention that anytime one uses stock art, they run the risk someone else will use the same image.) What about the guy/gal that first came up with the multi-flower-embellished silhouette element? That person should sue every graphic designer in the country.

The typeface and spacing for "easy natural" are very similar to those of "the fragile" as well. It's an obvious rip. Something I'd expect from a lazy design student, but never in (as you say) designs for a large corporation appearing worldwide.

I doubt Mr. Carson took the flower photos. The photographer is who should be taking legal action. You can't very well sue for stealing design ideas- happens all of the time, but not crediting the photographer is is the issue in this situation. Additionally, I sure hope Mr. Carson had permission to use the photos in the first place... I hear there has been trouble for him with that in the past.

actually your flower doubt is quite wrong.
if you look at mr carsons last book trek,
youll see he took ALL the photos for the fragile
cd packaging. and he copyrighted them.
get clued in and stay tuned.